Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Arjun Kharpal Mackenzie Sigalos"


3 mentions found


A pedestrian walks past the TATA pop up store with a poster reading 'The Future is AI' ahead of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, on Sunday, Jan. 14, 2024. Some of the world's biggest companies are pushing their AI products and services with one declaring: "The future is AI." Companies from U.S. semiconductor firm Intel to Salesforce had AI slogans on the properties they took over. The "AI House" was one of the biggest displays on the Davos Promenade. Arjun Kharpal | CNBCU.S. semiconductor firm Intel took over one of the properties on the Davos Promenade with its AI agenda front and center.
Persons: Salesforce, Arjun Kharpal Organizations: Economic, Bloomberg, Getty, Global, Companies, Intel, CNBC U.S, CNBC Locations: Davos, Switzerland, DAVOS, Swiss
So what's hot in fintech right now? One area fintech companies are getting excited by is an improvement to online checkout tools. Callan Carvey, global head of operations at Cleo, said the firm's AI connects to a customer's bank account to get a better understanding of their financial behavior. "A job that typically would take around one or two weeks can now be completed in 30 minutes, right. Several fintech executives CNBC interviewed spoke of how they're not interested in launching products tailored to crypto as the demand from their customers isn't there.
Persons: MacKenzie Sigalos, hasn't, they've, Starling, Richard Davies, Davies, Niklas Guske, , B2C fintechs, David Singleton, Guske, dazzled, Cleo, Callan Carvey, Carvey, Teo Blidarus, Taktile's, Hiroki Takeuchi, Takeuchi, Changpeng Zhao, they're, Jack Zhang, Zhang, Prajit Nanu, cryptocurrencies, Banks, Nanu Organizations: Bank, fintechs, CNBC, Business, Allica Bank, B2B, Tiger, Schroders Capital, Atom Bank, Schroders, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, SEC, U.S, cryptocurrencies Locations: Amsterdam, MacKenzie Sigalos AMSTERDAM, Netherlands, British, Atomico, U.S
Hackers who stole around $477 million worth of cryptocurrency from collapsed exchange FTX have started to launder the funds into bitcoin . Blockchain analytics company Elliptic estimates that around $477 million worth of cryptocurrency had been stolen from FTX. The theft adds insult to injury to FTX, a once $32 billion crypto empire who collapse has sent shockwaves across the industry. Crypto compliance software company Chainalysis in a tweet on Sunday also confirmed that hackers are moving funds. The implosion of FTX has left Bankman-Fried a paper pauper and investors left unable to access their crypto assets.
Total: 3